Bacterial resistance to antibiotics has made it necessary to resort to antibiotics that have considerable toxicities. Here, we show that the cyclic 9-amino acid peptide CARGGLKSC (CARG), identified via phage display on () bacteria and through screening in mice with -induced lung infections, increases the antibacterial activity of CARG-conjugated vancomycin-loaded nanoparticles in -infected tissues and reduces the needed overall systemic dose, minimizing side effects. CARG binds specifically to bacteria but not Pseudomonas bacteria , selectively accumulates in -infected lungs and skin of mice but not in non-infected tissue and Pseudomonas-infected tissue, and significantly enhances the accumulation of intravenously injected vancomycin-loaded porous silicon nanoparticles bearing the peptide in -infected mouse lung tissue. The targeted nanoparticles more effectively suppress staphylococcal infections relative to equivalent doses of untargeted vancomycin nanoparticles or of free vancomycin. The therapeutic delivery of antibiotic-carrying nanoparticles bearing peptides targeting infected tissue may help combat difficult-to-treat infections.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6015743PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41551-017-0187-5DOI Listing

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